Lepow v. Dimond Leather Co.

117 F. Supp. 480, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4281
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedDecember 30, 1953
DocketCiv. A. No. 51-149
StatusPublished

This text of 117 F. Supp. 480 (Lepow v. Dimond Leather Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lepow v. Dimond Leather Co., 117 F. Supp. 480, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4281 (D. Mass. 1953).

Opinion

FORD, District Judge.

This action arises out of an alleged breach by defendant of a contract be[481]*481tween the parties for the financing of certain shipments of skins which were being imported from India and Pakistan.

Defendant corporation has for many years been engaged in the leather business, and since 1939 has devoted itself entirely to the importation of hides and skins. Its purchases in 1949 included shipments of goatskins from Anciens Etablissements Blumenthal, Calcutta, India, South Indian Export Co., Ltd., Madras, India, and Western India Skin Exporters, Karachi, Pakistan. These are the three shipments involved in the present action.

Early in July of 1949, Isaac Dimond, president of defendant, was introduced in New York to plaintiff, a New York resident, who had also been engaged for many years in the business of importing and exporting hides and skins. As a result of their conversations they entered into an arrangement whereby plaintiff was to finance these shipments to defendant, which was confirmed by a letter of Dimond to plaintiff on July 20. This arrangement may be summarized as follows: Plaintiff was to furnish funds to pay for the skins by opening letters of credit in British sterling in favor of defendant’s shippers. These shippers were to ship the skins to ports in East Africa, consigned to agents of plaintiff, who, on receipt of the skins, would transship them to New York consigned to defendant. Defendant agreed that upon presentation by plaintiff of bills of lading showing such shipment of the skins to defendant in New York, it would pay plaintiff for the sterling advanced by plaintiff to the shippers at a rate not less than $3.40 nor more than $3.48 per British pound sterling, dependent upon exchange rates in New York in effect at the time of the shipment. If the plans had been carried out successfully defendant would have profited by being able to acquire the sterling to pay his shippers at not more than $3.48 per pound, at a time when the New York exchange rate was about $4.02. Plaintiff could purchase the, sterling from his correspondent abroad at $3.22 and would profit by the difference between this figure and the price at which defendant would reimburse him.

In accordance with defendant’s instruction's plaintiff caused a letter of credit to be opened in favor of Western India Skin Exporters in the amount of £7,500, and by means of telegraphic transfers caused £7,450 to be forwarded to South Indian Export Co. Ltd., and £7,300 to the Blumenthal firm. Telegraphic transfers were used in the latter two cases at the request of defendant, who represented that these shippers wanted payment to be made in that manner. In letter of August 8, 1949, confirming these instructions, Dimond stated: “This is to confirm that we assume the responsibility for your cabling the Sterling out to the shippers; that the shippers, in turn, will deliver the Goatskins covered by their contracts with us.”

The opening of the letter of credit and the making of the telegraphic transfers was actually done by plaintiff’s correspondent, one Binjamin Israelachvili, of Milan, Italy. The sterling supplied was, therefore, sterling owned by Israelachvili, an Italian resident. In accordance with plaintiff’s instructions, the shipments of the skins were to be made on American vessels consigned to plaintiff’s agents in Djibouti, French Somali Coast, the destination to be given as “Djibouti in transit”.

Defendant’s shippers did not ship the skins after these funds had been made available to them by plaintiff, on the ground that under the applicable exchange control regulations then in force in India and Pakistan sterling owned by an Italian resident was not available for use in payment of exports either to Djibouti in transit or to an ultimate destination in the United States. Plaintiff was informed of this fact by defendant, notice of the difficulties encountered by the South Indian Export Co., Ltd., at least, being given as early as by Dimond’s August 25 letter to plaintiff. There appears to have been some delay in the receipt of the transfer made to .the [482]*482Blumenthal firm, but it was finally received in September after defendant had arranged for payment by other means. Defendant had at first suggested that the funds when received by Blumenthal should be retained to cover future purchases of skins by defendant. However, by September 19, Dimond, by letter, informed plaintiff that Blumenthal had met with similar refusal by the Indian authorities to allow Blumenthal to use the funds in payment for the shipments in question.

Meanwhile defendant had arranged to pay for the skins by opening letters of credit in favor of its shippers with American bankers, utilizing American-owned sterling to finance direct shipments of the goods to the United States. In the case of the Blumenthal firm this was done by extending a letter of credit which had been opened on June 30, 1949 in favor of this shipper before the negotiations with plaintiff had begun and which had been allowed to expire unused. When the shippers had drawn against these letters of credit defendant, in late September and October, paid its bankers for the sterling at approximately the new rate after devalution of $2.80 per pound sterling.

Israelachvili had charged the £7,450 telegraphed to South Indian Export Co. Ltd., to plaintiff’s account in the amount of $23,992.42 (at the rate of $3.22 per pound sterling). This money was returned to Israelachvili and plaintiff’s account credited on September 6 with $23,-467.50 (at the then current rate of $3.-15).

On September 19, 1949, the pound sterling was devalued by the British government at which time the official rate of exchange became $2.80 per pound sterling. Thereafter, on November 9, 1949, the funds transferred to Blumenthal (for which plaintiff’s account had been charged $23,509.22, at the rate of $3.22) were returned to Israelachvili and-plaintiff’s account credited with $19,199, at the rate of $2.63. The letter of credit in favor • of Western India Skin Importers for. • which plaintiff had, .been-charged $24,150 expired without being used, and several months later plaintiff’s account with Israelachvili was credited with $18,330.81, at the rate of $2.46.

Plaintiff claims as damages the difference between the amounts for which he was credited for this sterling on its eventual return to his correspondent and the amount he would have received had he been reimbursed by defendant at the contract rate of $3.48.

Under the terms of the original contract between the parties, plaintiff was entitled to be reimbursed by defendant for the sterling advanced to the shippers only upon receipt by defendant of properly endorsed bills of lading and accompanying documents showing transshipment of the goods to New York, consigned to defendant. Plaintiff has never presented such documents and the goods have never been transshipped, so the condition precedent to payment under the original contract has never been fulfilled and defendant has not thereby been put under any obligation- to pay.

Plaintiff, of course, argues that he is excused from compliance with the condition because his failure to transship the merchandise was due to the failure of defendant’s shippers to ship the skins to his agent at Djibouti. But this, in turn, was due to the fact that they were never paid in funds legally usable for payment for the goods which were to be shipped, and .the failure to furnish legally usable funds is attributable to plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
117 F. Supp. 480, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lepow-v-dimond-leather-co-mad-1953.